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French sci-fi 'Valeria' to film outside of France due to language choice
Cara Delevingne in New York, June 6, 2015. The British supermodel, stars in the movie, u00e2u20acu02dcPaper Towns,u00e2u20acu2122 an adaptation of the John Green novel. u00e2u20acu201d Picture by Bryan Derballa/The New York Times

PARIS, Aug 26 — “Valerian”, an upcoming big-budget French sci-fi movie, may have to be filmed outside of France because it will star American and British actors, its director, Luc Besson, said this week.

The filmmaker, perhaps best known globally for his high-octane — and English-language — “Transporter” and “Taken” movie franchises and “The Fifth Element”, explained to French radio that “Valerian” would likely not qualify for French tax credits because it would be filmed in English, not French.

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Those credits are vital for the movie, which will star Clive Owen, Cara Delevingne and Dane DeHaan and whose budget of around €170 million (RM827.93million) — unprecedented for France — rivals those of big Hollywood productions.

“There’s a small problem called tax credits... I have a French film being made in English so I have the right to zero (credits) as a French film,” Besson told radio station RTL on Monday.

Even if he tried to pass the movie off as a foreign production, he said he would still not qualify because his production company EuropaCorp is French.

“I’m in a legal black hole,” he complained.

As a result, “I don’t know if I can film it in France” even though “I want to make it in my country with a French crew”.

He noted that, if he filmed in Hungary, he could recover credits worth up to 40 per cent of his company’s investment.

“I’m a patriot, but 15 to 20 million (euros) starts to get a bit heavy.”

Besson’s public airing of the problem, which seemed aimed at pressuring French authorities, came weeks after EuroCorp confirmed that the 56-year-old French filmmaker had become a US tax resident. Besson says he still pays most of his taxes in France.

“Valerian”, which is slated for a July 2017 release, is based on a long-running French graphic novel series started in the 1960s about an eponymous space- and time-travelling agent and his smart and sexy female companion Laureline.

DeHaan, a 29-year-old American actor who played the villain Green Goblin in 2014’s “The Amazing Spider-Man 2”, will be the star of the movie, alongside 23-year-old British model-actress Delevingne as Laureline. Clive Owen, also a Briton, will play a space commander.

Filming of the movie is expected to start early next year and 1,200 crew members will be involved in the six-month shoot. — AFP/Relaxnews

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